
Plex uses a variety of different media detection and matching methods in order to correctly identify titles and download the appropriate metadata (plot summary, box art, etc.). Well it took me several days of research and experimentation (and scouring the Plex forums where some users' independent discoveries helped light the way), but I finally both figured out what was going on and came up with a way to fix it. In the below screenshot you can see that plex only identified one of my movie files correctly, while it renamed all of the others with the unexpected title names, and used generic thumbnails instead of downloading the movie posters. Look ugly- it also interfered with Plex's ability toĭownload relevant data for most of the films, particularly the movie In most cases, Plex's renaming behavior didn't just cause the titles to These changes were confounding, because I followed Plex's instructions for naming and organizing movie files, but the Plex Media Server was clearly ignoring my effort and replacing my tidy titles with. For example, Plex renamed "The Sinister Saga of Making the Stunt Man (2000)" to "SINISTER_SAGA.Title1" and renamed "Inspector Morse: Cherubim and Seraphim (1992)" to "DLT16013.Title2". Only something annoying kept happening to my uploaded movies as soon as the Plex Media Server added them to my Plex library: Instead of using the nicely-formatted, correct titles that I assigned each of my movie files before copying them to the NAS, Plex consistently replaced their entries in the library with ugly and sometimes meaningless titles instead.

It seemed like the perfect solution: All I had to do was copy my properly named and organized movie files to the NAS and Plex would serve them up to the Roku devices in my home. You have media files–music, movies, TV shows, and even photos–but you don’t have an easy way to access them on your plentiful and varied devices.I first discovered Plex Media Server when looking for a way to stream backed-up copies of my DVD collection from my Synology Disk Station Network Attached Storage (NAS) device.

Here’s a common situation that all too many people find themselves in. Plex Media Server is a user-friendly way to store and stream your movies, shows, and other media in from one place, whether you’re at home or on-the-go. If you’re looking for a no-headache way to watch TV and movies anywhere, this is it. Next, download Plex clients for your TV, mobile device, or use DLNA/UPnP streaming to stream over your local network. Download the server application from Plex's website, install it, then follow the setup process to add media to your library.
